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>I don't like sand. It's coarse and rough and irritating and it gets everywhere.
Has anyone thought that maybe what Lucas was trying to convey with this line was that since he is opposed to sand, that he symbolically is an opposing force to it? And it is more interesting because just that analogy alone is shallow, but it is interesting given that he is somewhat an actual force of nature and how he came into existence, how he chose his direction and what he chose to do. And that he is like water and its chaotic and ever-changing character, eroding an established structure as a rising tide?
And Christensen was supposed to be even more dryer than he normally is with his acting, with his inflection to show that Anakin was also in some way what he despised; rigid, coarse, and dry?Could it have been that simple and I didn't see it before? I was looking it at it from many other angles.
Could it be sand represents that typical establishment and also prophecy is viewed here as just piles of thoughts and ideals until they are rightly constructed and the water is what causes a much needed change, and bringing the balance (as we all know mostly of what balance he brought)? And not saying that I agree with the Sith and their course of action lol.
And maybe the word "coarse" was used purposefully to show how he was bringing balance to the "course", instead of coarse lol please but it works well here, meaning the direct and faulty course in which most ideals take before they are rightfully structured?
>>84225537
I always just figured that sand reminded him of his shit life on Tatooine
>giving Lucas this much credit
It's just a young male awkwardly trying to converse with a female he's attracted to.
Its a shakespeare reference you illliterate swine